Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, April 09, 1943, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
'April 0. ItM
PRICES VIEWED
AS INFLATION
CURB MEASURE
(Continued From Page One)
increase except that ha has re-
celved greater authority to de
termine questions that will arise
In the OPA and the war labor
board as to border and hardship
cases. Such cases, under the
new order, he said, will be sub?
mitted to him for consideration,
Instead of to the president per
sonally. Directive Power
' Byrnes said his power to Issue
directives is no greater than the
authority previously granted
him.
"Was the order a mandate to
Mr. Byrnes?" a reporter in
quired. No, the president said, It was a
statement of policy.
Mr. Roosevelt said he got this
idea of the comparison with a
four-legged stool from one of the
group of farm leaders which con
sulted with him twice in the
past fortnight. .
TOO LATE TO
CLASSIFY
FOR THE BETTER grades of
fuel oils, accurate, metered de
liveries, try Fred H. Heilbron
' ner, 821 Spring street, tele
' phone 4153. Distributor Shell
Heating Oils. 4-30
FURNACES vacuum cleaned.
Phone 7149. 4-10
CHIMNEY SWEEP Phone
7149. 4-10
OIL BURNER SERVICE
Phone 7149. 4-10
WANTED TO RENT, by April
' 16, nicely furnished home, two
or three bedrooms, city or
country. Reliable tenants.
Bramlett, 521 N. 10th. 4-14
FOR SALE Table model separ
ator, $15; 300-chick electric
brooder, . $7.50. Phone 5031.
4349 Winter avenue. 4-10
FOR SALE Electric range
Westinghouse. . Excellent con
dition. .$40. Call 6895. 4-10
Hi MODEL A PANEL New
. top, new motor, 16-in. wheels.
Very fine condition. 1103 Cali
fornia. 4-12
FOR SALE New gas range $170,
single sleeping' bag, air mat
tress, $30; new window shades,
all sizes; curtains, 4x6 rugs,
- set of dishes, books, odd dishes
and glassware. ' 737 Alameda
street Phone 6247; -4-9
FOR SALE Unclaimed suits,
overcoats, sport coats. Wool
ens sold by the yard. Alter
ing, repairing, mining, clean
' ing. Sudden service.
ORRES TAILOR SHOP
129 South 7th 4-9
HAVE A FIT at Orres Tailors,
for men and women. . 4-9
FIVE-ROOM furnished, modern
house on half acre on Etna
street. References. Call Mrs.
McCormeck, 6553 or 4467.
4-10
FOR SALE 1940 Mercury 5-pas-senger
coupe, low mileage,
$800 cash. Phone 6266. 4-13
2-BEDROOM modern house, V
acre, drilled well, pressure
system, nice garden spot, 8
miles north on old highway,
across from Associated Sta
tion at Shady Pine. 4-12
TRY CENTENNIAL DOG MEAL
Cheap and does tha trick.
People's Warehouse. 4-9
WESTINGHOUSE range, nearly
new, nas cooker pot. Electric
water heater. Small wood
lathe and motor, $7.50. Floor
furnace with thermostat. Peo
ple's Warehouse. 4-9
jiBxxisti uiij gives you more
heat per coupon. Buy Stand
ard Burner Oils. Peyton &
uo. 4-30
WANTED TO RENT Five or
6-roora unfurnished house in
good location near grade
school. W. E. Strom, Hotel
Willard. 4-9
LOST Ration Book No. 1 be-
wi'Ml ia ui n a; . sr. uri Ll Hill.
. Call-Willard Hotel. 4-12
GET THE UTMOST In flavor
and nourishment from those
precious rationed foods. The
t trestone Deluxe Electric
Ranee assures cooking ciireE
with speed, efficiency and ease.
see uiem at your' Firestone
. Store, 527 Main, phone 3234.
4-12
CASH REGISTER and adding
machine, pair No. 9 corked,
hand-made boots, 16-inch tops.
12 gauge Winchester shotgun
and shells, new condition.
1108 California, 4-12
FOR SALE Good house on
. California avenue, corner lot,
3 bedrooms, closed-ln porches,
garden space, shade tree. Ph.
' 1728. - - 4.I8
Poiatoes
SAN FRANCISCO, April 9
(AP-USDA) Potatoes 1 Oregon,
3 Idaho can arrived; one car
arrived by truck; 4 broken, 3
unbroken cars on track; mar
ket iirm; Idaho Russets No. 1,
$3.33, Bakers $3.71; Klamath
Russets No. 1, $3.23, No. 2
bakers $3.17.
LOS ANGELES, April 9 (AP-
USDA) Potatoes: 1 Utah car
arrived; 1 California and 1 Utah
arrived by truck; 2 broken, 1
unbroken cars on track; market
steady; no sales offered.
CHICAGO, April 9 (AP
USDA) Potatoes, arrivals 47;
on track 62; total US shipments
691; old stock; supplies very
light, track trading very light
account of lack of offerings of
table stock; market unsettled;
new stock, no sales reported;
North Dakota Bliss Triumphs
commercials $3.30; Idaho Russet
Burbanks US No. 1, $4.00; util
ity grade $3.60; Nebraska Bliss
Triumphs commercials $3.59.
(Continued From Page One)
that Ensign James be permitted
to remain In the courtroom,
Other witnesses had been ex
cluded. Lomax Informed Circuit
Judge L. G. Lewelling that he
might call James as a witness,
and he was ordered to leave.
Preceding James on the stand,
Charles T. Poole, Lane county
coroner, testified that he re
moved the body from the train
at Eugene.
A few minutes earlier in his
opening statement to the jury,
Leroy Lomax, counsel for the ne
gro, said:
The state has accused Folkes
of cutting Mrs. James' throat as
she lay in her berth because she
resisted him. Her death oc
curred shortly after 4 a. m.,
January 23, as the Southern Pa
cific s West Coast Limited roar
ed through the Willamette val
ley. Explains Actions
Lomax said Folkes retired
shortly after the train left Port
land, and awakened about 4
a. m. He admitted that the negro
went through car D and past
Mrs. James' berth, as charged
by the state, but insisted he went
to a smoking room. '
He returned to the diner gal
ley, Lomax continued, and baked
several pans of muffins, cooked
two kinds of cereal, and served
breakfast to two trainmen.
The attorney said H. M.
Hughes, porter in car D, was in
the smoking compartment. At
about 4:38 a. m., he heard a man
cry out:
"My God! Stop this train a
woman has been murdered."
Sses Marina
Hughes then related, Lomax
said, that he dashed into the
aisle of the car "in a split sec
ond." He said he saw a form
standing in the aisle, over a form
on the floor of the car. He
turned on the celling lights and
saw the standing form was a
marine, partially dressed. He
had blood on his left hand,
Hughes related. A marine, Pvt.
Harold Wilson, occupant of up
per 13, told police that he was
the first to reach Mrs. James
after she tumbled from her bed.
At the time, Lomax continued.
Folkes was at work in the galley.
Later, he said, Wilson came
through the train, and wiped the
blood from his hand on a towel
in the second car from the death
car.
List Denied
Lomax told the jury the rail
road company had denied him
the list of passengers in the car,
and that he had been permitted
to Interview only five possible
witnesses.
'I don't know for sure," he
said, "but I think Folkes' only
witness will be myself."
Doors to the courtroom were
closed to spectators at 9:30 a. m.,
leaving more than a hundred
milling In the corridors. Today
for the first time, school children
were barred. The 180 seats in
the courtroom were filled, how
ever. Always read the classified ads.
NOW 1 2 SWELL
n w " HITSI
Doors Open 1:30 6:45
AHM 1 1 m '.1MJ
1
ARMOR FORCE
PUSHES NAZIS
TOWARD
SFAX
(Continued From Page One)
L. Alexander, allied deputy
commander in chief.
(A transoccan dispatch broad
cast by the Berlin radio and re
corded by the Associated Press
said "The great superiority of
the enemy in men and material
is showing Its effect." Elaborat
ing upon a nazi high command
communique which said axis
troops had frustrated allied en
circlement attempts in bitter
fighting, the dispatch reported
that "The detaching movement
toward the north ... to all ap
pearances Is being continued.'
Americans Push On
(A British radio broadcast re
corded by CBS said American
forces thrusting along the road
from Maknassy to the coast (by
way of Mezzouna) "are now re
ported to be little more- than
20 miles from General Sir Ber
nard Montgomery's spearhead").
Military quarters announced
that allied observers saw axis
troops heading out of Mahares
yesterday. Both Mahares and
Mezzouna are way stations on
the Gaisa-Sfax railway. Mahares
lies 50 miles northeast of Gabes.
While American and British
aerial squadrons maintained as
saults upon retiring axis col
umns, it was announced that
130 enemy vehicles had been
destroyed and 200 damaged in
the past two days.
Rommel Short
Pressed hard by the eighth
army, Rommel was growing
short of motor transports to ex
tricate his rear guards.
In the Medjaz-El-Bab sector
of northern Tunisia the British
maintained the offensive launch
ed Wednesday on a 12-mile
front. Long-range guns knocked
out two enemy tanks there.
Military quarters said one
enemy tank concentration in
that area was observed yester
day under violent attack by
German dive-bombers which ob
viously had mistaken their tar
get.
Other Actions .
In the central sector enemy
transports moving north to Zag-
houan, lo miles east of the nazi
base at Pont du Fahs, were at
tacked by RAF Spitfires and
four vehicles were wrecked.
American - piloted Spitfires
damaged one Messerschmitt dur
ing a battle of aerial patrols.
A small force of British naval
motor craft engaged a strongly
escorted enemy convoy by night
off the port of Bizerte, sank one
supply ship and scored two tor
pedo hits on another, it was
announced.
Enemy destroyers and E-boats
opened fire after the close-range
attack, but the raiders suffered
only superficial damage and one
minor casualty.
MERRILL Word of the pass
ing of Mrs. Emma Kidwell,
Klamath county pioneer, was re
ceived here Friday morning
from Eugene by Mrs. Kidwell's
granddaughter, Mrs. Roy Beas
ley. Mrs. Kidwell, past 80 years of
age at the time of her passing,
was an early day resident of the
Merrill district, and left this sec
tion some 25 years ago. She was
the mother of J. B. Kidwell of
Jenny Creek, the grandmother
of Joe Kidwell, also of that place.
Seven grandchildren and several
great-grandchildren survive. Fu
neral services will be held at Eu
gene. First gas well in Pennsylvan
ia was drilled in Westmoreland
county in-1878.
Wf NOW!
Opin I ill YeVHHaWlssVHHHMBs. i I
E( TOWER h- ll
W. 1 W WV The Range Busters i
. JOHN KINO
Thrills It Adventure in david sharp m
" ViT&W";! "HAUNTED i
iilVUWll RANCH" I
ml lEbcssssSl zzr I
1 """" fliP
II III III I I III Ill Willi Mil l'i lilfr"
Australian Envoys 1';:.
Hopes for Planes
To Hit Japanese
SAN FRANCISCO. April 8
(VP) Australia's minister for for
eign affairs indicated today he
hopes increasing numbers of
planes will be made available
to the allies In the southwest
Pacific so that pressure upon
Japan may be maintained and
expanded.
The minister, Dr. H. V. Evatt,
began enlisting American pub
lic opinion yesterday behind his
territorial view that the Japa
nese must be kept from con
solidating the economic gains
resulting from their conquests,
FOUR ALLIED SHIPS
8!
(Continued from Page One)
that the following damage was
suggested:
Destroyer Hit
"(A) One destroyer damaged
by bombs and later sunk while
being towed.
"(B) One tanker sunk as a re
sult of damage by bombs.
"(C) One corvette sunk as a
result of damage by bombs.
"(D) One small fuel oil boat
sunk.
"2. Next of kin of all casual
ties will be notified by telegram
as soon as possible.
(Imperial Tokyo headquarters
asserted today that strong Jap
anese naval and air forces sank
an American cruiser, destroyer
and 10 transports and damaged
three other transports in a
Wednesday attack off Guadal
canal. The Japanese claimed
their losses were limited to six
planes which "crash-dived Into
enemy objectives. )
Eagles Purchase
$1000 War Bond
Fraternal Order of Eagles
purchased a $1000 war bond
Friday to help Klamath Falls
reach Its quota for April. This
makes a total of $17,000 In
bonds purchased to date by the
aerie and ladier auxiliary.
A large class of candidates
will be initiated Friday night,
and following the meeting
there is to be special entertain
ment as well as a lunch served
in the dining room. Ladies are
invited to attend. ,
u
OBITUARY
ARTHUR EDWIN SMITH
Arthur Edwin Smith, a native
of Bigelow, Missouri, age 27
years, 8 months and 9 days,
passed away in this city Thurs
day, April 8 at 11:20 p. m., his
death being due to injuries re
ceived a few hours earlier at a
logging camp in the Bly district.
He is survived by his wife,
Phyllis and two daughters,
Marilyn Jo and Mary Ellen of
Tionesta, California; his father,
Thomas M. Smith, Lakeview,
Oregon; his mother of Medford,
Oregon; one brother, Joe D.
Smith, Medford and five sisters,
Mrs. Dorothy V. Huff, Lakeview,
Oregon, Mrs. Helena May Cog
hill, WInnifred Smith and Bet
ty Smith all of Medford, Oregon.
The remains rest at the Earl
Whitlock Funeral Home, Pine
street at Sixth. Funeral ar
rangements will be announced
Saturday.
VITAL STATISTICS
RITTGARN Born at Light-
foot hospital, Klamath Falls,
Ore., April 5, 1943, to Mr. and
Mrs. Ellis H. Rittgarn,- 3250
Bristol street, a boy. Weight: 7
pounds 8 ounces.
NELSON Born at Lightfoot
hospital, Klamath Falls, Ore.,
April 7, 1943, to Mr. and Mrs.
Alvin Nelson, 2358 White street,
a boy. Weight: 7 pounds.
SINE Born at Hillside hospi
tal, Klamath Falls, Ore., April 8,
1943, to Mr. and Mrs. Elwood F.
Sine, 4220 Shasta way, a boy.
Weight: 7 pounds U ounces.
VAN HOOK Born at Klam
ath Valley hospital, Klamath
Falls, Ore., April 8, 1943, to Mr.
and Mrs. I. K. Van Hook, 4561
Boardman street, a girl. Weight:
8 pounds 13 ounces.
FEW RESPOND
TO CALL FOR
FIHE FIGHTERS
Local defense officials were
surprised, it was learned Friduy,
at the utter lack of response to
the call for volunteer forest flro
fightors.
About 200 volunteers are need'
ed. "It is very important that
wo have trained flro fighters In
case there should bo a largo for
est fire," Earl Reynolds, coordl
nator of local defense council,
said, "but so far not one person
has offered his services.
Anyono who Is interested
should sign up as soon as pos
sible as training will begin in
about a week.
Registration places are as fol
lows: Klamath Forest Protective
association at 240 Conger ave
nue. National Park Service of
fice, room 302, Federal build
ing. Rogue River National forest
office, room 217, Federal
building.
Klamath county defense
council offices in the chamber
of commerce building.
Persons can sign up at any of
these plats...
DSC TO OFFER
OREGON STATE COLLEGE
A full summer term stressing
wartime training needs as well
as two 6 H -week sessions which
will run concurrently with the
longer "fourth quarter," has
been approved for this summer
at Oregon State college, Dr. M.
EUwood Smith, director of the
summer school, has announced.
The full summer quarter from
June 14 to August 27 will be
offered as part of the accelerat
ed program in which high
school graduates may gel a full
quarter ahead of the usual fall
entrance and others may short
en their time toward gradua
tion. The two sessions of 5V4
weeks are designed to meet the
needs of teachers and others
who cannot be in school for the
entire summer. The first is from
June 14 to July 20, and the sec
ond is from July 21 to August
27.
A full program in engineer
ing will be offered this summer
for the first time, Dr. Smith ex
plained, and courses in nearly
all of the major fields are geared
toward wartime requirements.
In addition to engineering, ma
jor work will be given in home
economics, science, secretarial
science, industrial arts and In
dustrial education, and educa
tion. Supporting courses will be
physical education, English, eco
nomics, history, political sci
ence, psychology, sociology, bus
iness administration and jour
nalism. -
State Department
Certifies Fruits
SALEM, April 9 P) State
department of agriculture Inspec
tors during March certified 1552
carloads and 304 truckloads of
Oregon fruits and vegetables for
shipment out of the state, the de
partment announced today.
Potatoes accounted for BZ per
cent of the shipments, followed
by pears, apples and onions, in
that order.
(mm
,7 ri
Plus
This V.
This
Laugh Hitl
until! Don "P"1
nun i i no . tut
2 SMASH HITSI
ri)MHun imi
riDUCIC
1
RKO Rtuf Is Picture
Price Ceiling Squeeze
On Meat Serious,
Says Davis
(Continued From Page One)
had been delayed because of the
Bankhaad bill.
That measure, rocontly vetoed
by the president and then re
turned by the senate to its agri
culture committee, would have
prevented conclusion of govern
ment benefits in computing par
ity prices of farmers products, an
action that would have raised
feed prices.
Meanwhile, Brown said he ex
pected about April 20 a report
from his committee studying
OPA personnel and that he
would not upon "tho fads" un
covered by Hint investigation.
He made that 'statement after
Pntman declared that the com
mittee had found that "three or
four'' persons In OPA wore re
sponsible for "all the trouble"
with moat packers "and our
hope is that those who won't ac
knowledge their errors and cor
rect them will be removed."
LK MEN FIRE
FIRST GUN IN
Tl
WASHINGTON, April 9 (P)
Organized milk producers fired
the first gun for the opposition
today In the coming congression
al battle over extending tho re
ciprocal trade agreement act for
three years from June 12.
Without waiting for the house
ways and means committee to
start hearings Monday on the
Doughton extension resolution
with Secretary Hull as the Initial
witness, Charles W. Holman, sec
retary of the National Coopera
tive Milk Producers' federation,
released a statement declaring it
would be unwise to grant new
life to this "totalitarian piece of
legislation" without limitations.
Holman said his organization
would join a number of farm and
labor groups in opposition exten
sion unless:
1. The, trade pacts are subject
to senate ratification the same as
treaties, by a two-thirds vote.
2. The benefits of the agree
ments are confined to the na
tions with which the United
States negotiates them instead
of, as at present, automatically
conferring such benefits on all
other nations not discriminating
against American trade.
3. The right of citizens to have
actions reviewed by tho federal
courts is restored, and
4 There is a "fundamental re
form" In the procedure of hold
ing hearings on proposed agree
ments. Holman, said a study by his
organization two years ago show
ed that the agreements would
"force American farmers to pay
the cost of developing the ex
ports, of our American indus
trialists." He added that while !
their broad effect could not be
measured now because of the
war, it "will be plenty" once the
transport facilities of other na
tions are released from war du
ties. NEW TODAY!
2 Smash Hits!
Htrs's a Smash Hit
. . . that'll rock you
to your hitl!
with riotous
comedy and
xomancel .
2nd Hit
Gary COOPER
Gee. RAFT
Francis Dee
In one of the great
est adventure stories
, ever ioldl . .
as
IE ACCORD
r to your
with riotous f
comedy and lyxv
xomancel
HP??
I ' m oiAy oifto! Ir
I I 'MM" ,,",B' I
l(Qrl tTiifmT
1
.XrtPf Pen"
Man
Rationing
Calendar
War Price and Rationing
Board, 434 Main street. Office
hours dally, 10i30 a. m. to
8i00 p. m.i Saturday, 10i30
a. m. to 4i00 p, m.
RATION BOOK NO. i
April 30 Blue Stumps D,
E and F (Canned, dried, or
frozen fruits and vegetables)
expire at midnight.
March 29 Rutlonlng of
Meat, Uuttor, Cheese, Canned
Fish and edible oils started.
Red stamps only from Book
No, 3 to be used as follows:
AMnri-li 3D In April an. lull mo,
II April In Apfll 911. tul.t lm;
(1-.(.ll II lo April 0. 101.1 Inr,
l-A.rll ll lo April SO. lull Inc.
SUGAR
May 31 Stamp No. 12,
good for five pounds, expires
at midnight.
COFFEE
April 24 Slump No. 26,
war ration book No. 1 of book
.holders 14 years of ago or
over, good for 1 pound of cof
fee, expires at midnight.
GASOLINE
May 21 No. 5 stamps, each
good for four gullons, expire
at midnight.
SHOES
June 13 Stamp No. 17,
war ration book 1, valid for
purchase of one pair of shoes,
expires at midnight. Family
stamps aro interchangeable.
FUEL OIL
September 30 Fuel oil
5th period coupon expires.
LOSSf TERRIFICI
KANSAS CITY, W) Three
hose and two hook and ladder
companies converged o n the
Ray L. Simkins home.
Firemen dashed into the kit
chen, emerging with a flaming
roast which they threw away.
Then they wont back to tlioir
stations.
Damage: six ration points,
8on Arrives S. B. Hopkins
of Hillside avenue has received
word of tho arrlvul of a son,
James Wallace, to his son-in-law
and duughter, Mr. and Mrs.
John H. Parkinson of Jerome,
Ida, Mrs. Hopkins is In the
north with her daughter. The
child, their second son, was
born April 5 in a Jeromo hos
pital. Returns Home Mrs. E. D.
Johnson has returned to her
home on Pacific Terrace follow
ing a visit in southern Califor
nia. mi
M..MH
0 ,
At Least' 37Tmes-tfie, Peasure oFdryRlntJn Tomi:
VESSntEC! SEATS HOW 1.-0 eJSHk
n James f f -gh tgS
n. iUfaisfemtetet
PELICAN -aayl
'JV,ey
GOVERNMENT
TO ROLL BACK
HOG
PRCES
WASHINGTON, April 0 (PI
Tho government Intends shortly,
It was learned authoritatively to
day, to roll buck the market
price of live hogs from current
iovels of nearly $10 a hundred
pounds to about $14.60, and t
thp sumo time provide "suppxi'l
prices" to give hog producers
additional piiymeuU.
Officials, who usked that their
mime he withheld, indkutecl
that OPA Chief Prentiss M.
Brown and Food Administrator
Chester C. Davis hud agreed on
such a program and would issuu
a public statomonl Inter In Ilia
day. It was understood, how
over, lh statement merely
would announce Unit the nctini(
would bn taken soon, and tho
actual order was not expected
today.
The action, which acluully tins
been pending suvcrul weeks, was
described as the first major i'c,
suit of President Roosevelt's or
der last night to "hold tho line"
on all furm prices und wuges.
On Capitol Hill Brown him
self suld that In lino with the
president's order regulations
now are being prepared to bring
j under price control wheat, cot-
ion, iresn xiu, appirs nnu uu-i
fresh fruits as they come Into
season, certain oil bearing seeds,
milk for manufacturing pur
poses, and other products not
now under control.
"No ceilings will bo ordered
for those farm commodities that
have not reached purity, In keep
ing with provisions of the emer
gency price control act. nsi
amended last October," ho udded'
in an announcement rend dur
ing u hearing of the houso small
business committee before which
ho and Davis wore to testify.
Pctroloum engineers recently
announced a new cracking pro
cess whereby the power from
gasoline may bo increased four
fold. A new typo of winter air
plane tire designed to resist
skidding has been announced.
There aro parallel rows of steel
colls Imbedded In tho trefld so
that the edges grip Ice and
snow .
Hans Norland Imurane.
71
.
WBlL
Tha Thru Mesculteers
i n .